I had one of those moments again recently.
I was watching a video on YouTube when I suddenly realized that I didn’t care about what I was seeing.
The video wasn’t bad. It wasn’t offensive. It wasn’t stupid. In fact, it was reasonably interesting. That was the problem.
I sat there for a moment and asked myself a question that has become increasingly common in the last few years: Why am I spending part of my life on this?
I don’t remember what the subject was. It could have been history. It could have been politics. It could have been science, culture, economics, theology or some obscure piece of trivia. The specific topic doesn’t matter because the pattern is always the same.
I start with something that I specifically want to know. Then another thing catches my attention. Then another. One link leads to another. One article leads to another. One video suggests another video. Before I realize what has happened, an hour has disappeared. Then another. And then I realize it’s 4 in the morning — and I’ve wasted hours.
The strange thing is that I wasn’t seeking entertainment.
Most discussions about distraction focus on entertainment. We imagine people wasting their lives watching mindless videos, scrolling through inane social media or consuming celebrity gossip or watching “reality TV.” Certainly some people do that, but that’s not my problem.
My problem is curiosity.

Can we find way to separate love of home from worship of state?
False dichotomy: Your choice isn’t coercive state vs. lawlessness
Major parties compete to see who can tell the biggest lie about jobs
‘Self government’ means you govern yourself, not obey your neighbors
If you’ve gotten on the wrong bus, nothing changes until you get off
We find meaning in responsibility, not in pursuit of empty pleasures
Only certainty of life is that every one of us crosses River Styx alone
If you’re scared of being ‘bad,’ manipulated praise relieves fear
Politicians, empires come and go; only love and nature will endure